﻿-- N11 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Next_Eleven


SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'BANGLADESH'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'EGYPT'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'INDONESIA'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'MEXICO'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'NIGERIA'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'PAKISTAN'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'PHILIPPINES'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'TURKEY'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'KOREA, REPUBLIC OF'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'VIET NAM'
UNION SELECT * FROM common.Country WHERE NAME LIKE 'IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF'


/*
The eleven countries – Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Turkey, South Korea, and Vietnam – 
identified by Goldman Sachs investment bank and economist Jim O'Neill in a research paper 
as having a high potential of becoming, along with the BRICs/BRICS, the world's largest economies in the 21st century.

MIKT (also known as MIST) is a neologism referring to the economies of 
Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea, and Turkey. These countries also belong to Next Eleven countries.
At the end of 2011, the four major countries (Mexico, Indonesia, [South] Korea and Turkey) also known as MIKT, 
made up 73 percent of all Next Eleven GDP. BRIC GDP was $13.5 trillion, while MIKT GDP at almost 30 percent of that: $3.9 trillion.[1]
*/
